Security Trust Co. v. Tarpey

54 N.E. 1041, 182 Ill. 52
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 1041 (Security Trust Co. v. Tarpey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Security Trust Co. v. Tarpey, 54 N.E. 1041, 182 Ill. 52 (Ill. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant, the Security Trust Company, filed its bill of complaint in the superior court of Cook county, praying for the cancellation of two policies of insurance on the life of William C. Cummings, one for $3000 and the other for $2000, payable to his sister, the appellee, Mary Tarpey. William C. Cummings answered the original bill and Mary Tarpey demurred to it, but Cummings died leaving Mary Tarpey sole defendant, and the bill was amended accordingly. The grounds upon which the amended bill asked to have the policies canceled were, that in the application therefor Cummings falsely and fraudulently answered that he had not made application for life insurance and been rejected, when in fact he had been rejected by the Iowa Life Insurance Company; that he stated his health was g'ood, when he knew that it was not and that he had consumption; that he warranted these statements to be true while they were false and made with intent to deceive complainant, and that he obtained the policies by means of said false and fraudulent representations. By her answer to the amended bill defendant denied that Cummings made false representations, and alleged that complainant was organized for carrying on the business of insuring people who were in bad health and had been rejected by other companies; that for its policies complainant charged a premium far in excess of what other companies charged, and that it knew all the facts and circumstances concerning Cummings’ health and his relation with other insurance companies. The defendant also filed her cross-bill, praying that an account should be taken of the amount due on the policies and that complainant in the original bill should be decreed to pay the same. The cross-bill was answered, and replications being filed, the chancellor heard the cause and entered a decree dismissing the cross-bill and declaring the policies void. On a writ of error from the Appellate Court the decree was reversed, and the cause was remanded to the superior court with directions to dismiss the bill and to enter a decree in accordance with the prayer of the cross-bill.

The material facts proved are as follows: The complainant, the Security Trust Company, is a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania and doing business in the State of Illinois. In October, 1895, Norman Kellogg was the general agent of complainant in Chicago, and advertised that the company would take sub-standard risks,—such as had been rejected by other insurance companies. On October 5, 1895, William C. Cummings, at the solicitation of Harry Bate, an agent of the Iowa Life Insurance Company, made application to that company for a policy of insurance of §5000. On the following day Cummings was examined by the regular physician of said insurance company and signed a statement containing the following: “Have not now nor have ever had disease of lungs. I have had pneumonia. I have never made application tó any life insurance organization which was denied.” The report of that examination showed the number of respirations per- minute to be twenty-two; that there was a prolonged expiratory murmur at the apex of the right lung, and the physician gave it as his opinion that, compared with the average of lives of the same age and sex, he considered the chances of life of Cummings to be bad, and that if he himself were in the business he would not insure the subject for life nor for a limited term of years. The agent, Bate, knowing that Cummings would be rejected by the Iowa Life Insurance Company on this examination, went to Kellogg, the general agent of complainant, in pursuance of the advertisement requesting insurance agents that might have rejected risks to turn them in to complainant, and stated that he had a man who was going to be rejected. Kellogg explained to Bate and his partner, Louis Neuer, the objects and purposes of his company, and gave them a pamphlet issued by complainant, showing how to present applications and how to turn in rejected applications from other companies. The business of the company was stated to be insuring the classes of lives which are “sub-standard,” including persons with physical imperfections, such as deformity, loss of a limb, eye-sight or hearing; occupations of an extra-hazardous nature; persons of overweight or underweight, or subject to attacks of acute disease, and those with unfavorable family histories, and those rejected by other companies. The premium was about thirteen per cent higher than that charged by companies which required good risks. The pamphlet stated that original applications made to other companies would be considered if not over ninety days old, or verbatim copies of original applications, duly certified by the rejecting company or a responsible general agent, might be used, but in all cases an original application must be signed by the applicant before the issue of the policy, and the physician originally making the examination must inspect the “risk” before the application was sent in, and make a satisfactory report. Kellogg told these agents that a copy of the application to the Iowa company would be all right. Kellogg gave the agents blanks of complainant, and on October 7, 1895, Bate made what he called a copy of the other application to be used with complainant, and the doctor made a copy of his report. These supposed copies were made on blanks which Kellogg gave them, but the blanks were different from the blanks of the Iowa company, and as filled up neither of them was a verbatim copy, but they were to the same effect. A few days afterward the agents went to Cummings and read to him from the pamphlet what risks complainant insured and about the use of the copies. They asked him to sign the copies made as above, telling him that they were copies of the previous application, and he signed them as such, without reading them. Bate took these papers and delivered them to Kellogg-, telling’ him they were copies of the application to the Iowa Life Insurance Company. Kellogg read them and sent them to the complainant’s home office, in Philadelphia. The jihysician who had made the examination certified on October 11, 1895, that he had inspected Cummings and there had been no change in his physical condition since the date of said examination. The application, like the original of which it purported to be a copy, represented that Cummings had no disease of the lung's. The purported copies of the examination contained the following: “Are the respiratory organs (lungs, pleura, larynx, etc.,) free from any indication of disease?—No. Is the respiration full, easy and regular?—No. Number of respirations per minute?—22.’ Kate of pulse? (full minute) —85. Do you consider the risk first-class, fair or bad? If fair or bad, give reasons.—Fair; prolonged expiratory murmur at the apex of the right lung. Do you recommend the risk?—Yes.” The policies were issued and sent to Kellogg, and he was then fully informed that Cummings had been rejected by the* Iowa Life Insurance Company. With that knowledge Kellogg delivered the policies to Bate, who took them to Cummings and delivered them and collected the first quarterly premiums, giving the, money to Kellogg. On October 31, 1895, complainant had Cummings examined by its medical examiner, and about that time tendered back the premiums paid and demanded back the policies. When the next premiums became due they were tendered and refused. Cummings’ health remained apparently fair until the latter part of December, 1895, when quick consumption became manifest and ran a very rapid course until February 22, 1896, when he died.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 1041, 182 Ill. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-trust-co-v-tarpey-ill-1899.